The below video features contributions from Dr Angela Cassidy (Department of History, King’s College London), Dr Timothy Johnson (Actuarial Mathematics and Statistics, Heriot-Watt University), Dr Stuart Parkinson (Executive Director, Scientists for Global Responsibility).
The session includes presentations on the ongoing UK controversy over
culling wild badgers, exploring how public and policy debates have
turned upon multiple expectations and interpretations of ‘the evidence’
(while uncertainties have been pushed to the margins); the history of
mathematical probability, arguing that reflecting on the role of
probability in finance could inform how science approaches radical
uncertainty in general; and how the quality and communication of
scientific evidence can be strongly influenced by vested interests, such
as energy and defence companies, thus requiring serious thought about
the importance of integrity and public values in research.
What do you think? Please use the comment section below to pick up on any points…